Tuesday, May 10, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Hear t gets 5-year proba tion LOS ANGCELES XI/-Patricia Hearst, who admitted her part in a wild shooting and robbery, was placed on five years probation yesterday by a judge who express- ed compassion for her parents. The prosecution endorsed the light sentence, saying the heiress represented no threat to society and sug- gesting that authorities may have dealt too harshly with herin the past to avoid criticism that her wealth bought her special treatment. HEARST, 23, is currently free on bail from a seven- year sentence for a San Francisco bank robbery and could return to serve at least 14 more months if her appeal is rejected. Hearst, who faced the possibility of 15', years to life in prison on her plea of no contest, was silent and blank- faced as Superior Court Judge E. Talbot Callister an- nounced-his decision for leniency. "I don't think there is a heart in America that isn't full of compassion for her patents," the judge said of Randolph and Catherine Hearst, who sat in the front row of the packed courtroom. HE CALLED the Hearsts "good people who love their daughter" and cited the millions of dollars spent by the newspaper executive and his wife to try to ransom the heiress when she was kidnaped. After the sentencing the details of a probation report were released. According to the report, Hearst spends her time em- broidering, reading, jogging, playing tennis and horse- back riding. THE REPORT said she was to go to work for Good Housekeeping Magazine-a Hearst publication. Eventually she would like to marry and have children, the report said. In an unexpected move, the prosecution joined with the defense in recommending immediate probation for Hearst. DEPUTY DIST. Atty. Sam Mayerson said "I do not believe Hearst presents any threat to the community any longer." He added, "There has never been a case like this before and I hope there never will he again." He predicted that many peonle would he dissatisfied with the sentence, claiming llearst had received special treatment because of her wealth and notoriety. "IT WOULD BE wrong to satisfy those who say there is special treatment for the rich by punishing this de- fendant disaproportionately," Mayerson said. He sug- gested that authorities may have been too harsh with Hearst because of such criticism, The slender, tawny-haired heiress stood before the judge flanked by four attorneys. She wore a brown sweater, brown tweed skirt and hoots and was rushed in and out of the courtroom by private guards. She spoke not a word in the courtroom, and her at- torney, Al Johnson, said she was just as silent when she left. "The only thing I heard that she said was, 'Thank you,' " he said. Young plans to visit S. Africa WASHINGTON ( -Ambassador Andrew Young said yesterday he has "very few doubts" that he will visit South Africa on his two week tour of Africa, but the State Department said the arrange- ments remain unsettled. "It's no big thing," said the controversial ambassador to the United Nations. "If I go, it's fine, and if I don't go, it's still fine." YOUNG SPOKE with reporters after meeting with black House members a few hours before his scheduled departure to Africa. The former Georgia congressman said President Carter had encouraged him "to speak as controversially as I like. Young's tour, his third abroad for the adi nistration, begins with a meeting today in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, with U.S. ambassa dors in Africa. THE SOUTH AFRICAN government said it planned;no official contact with Young and that a stop in South Africa, where he has been invited to address university and business groups, was still under consideration. At the State Department, a spokesman, Frederick Brown, said "we're still working on that.' However, Rep. Parren Mitchell (I)-Md.) said- he assumes Young is going to South Africa and will meet with blacks there. "ONE OF THE things I admire most abort Ambassador Young is his adroitnes in his diplomacy and his ability to get to meet with vhom he iced: to meet" Mitchell said. Mitche'It 'aid eery niemihei' if the Canyr -sina 1 Ihck Caiucos i prci" red to stupporit Yius ir d "to f''t"opll uiCo-em: all of those wha, in m io o pisnin re r'sent ri'hti Ithinking who are mounting the scorritau- ard snnect-sars attck- an the ni- bassador. Young is schedoaed l tap is Ghans aid .NIceria after the ambassacdcr itueeting ait Alidjact and to go to Mapoto, Mozam- bique, ftr a U.N. conference supporting the blacks of Rhodesia and Naaibia who are ttsdeir minority white rule. On Saturday, Young wilt nieet in Lisbon, Portugal, with Vice President Walter Mondate in adaince of Mondale's meeting in 1Fitemen comb the rentains of a ho Viesos with Sott Alfrica Prime Minister John Vorster. by an explosion that killed two. Ii rarching for clues cme on Detroit's northwest side Saturday night thatt ass leveled His master's Voice For sheer bluster it is, hard to match "The Voice of Business," a newsletter which even for a cham- ber of commerce publication is way out in right field. This month's number, the brainchild of Richard Lesher, President of the Chamber of Commerce of the U.S., catalogues a whole list of "big brother" offenses by the government. Pity the poor $3.5 bil- lion coal-fired power plant which, says the "Voice," "was sacrificed on the altar of the black-footed fer- ret and the kangaroo rat." Or be astounded by the soft-shell clam, which has singlehandedly "halted a $2 billion nuclear power plant in New Hampshire." For the snail darter, a small fish which "has stalled a $116 million dam in Tennessee." No doubt about it, those endangered species are at war with the public interest, we thought, but the "Voice" thinks the whole thing is an outright crime. "This bizarre behavior," the newletter says,. "is certainly remin- iscent of the eccentricities of history's mad kings Nnd emporers. And yet it occurs-with increasing fre- quency-right here in the democratic, middle-class U.S.A." Imagine. Happenings * .. . . . looks like a good day to tour the galleries. An exhibition of modernistic and traditional art from the Chicago area is on display through May 23 at the Slusser Gallery in the School of Art, and an exhibit by Profs. Jacquelyn Rice and John Stephen- son of the University's Art School will be in the Union Gallery through May 27 . . Places are still available in the Alumni Council's summer seminar in academic administration. For information call Mary Edwards, 764-3316, M-W-F, 2-4 p.m. . . . The 20th conference on Great Lakes Research opens to- day in Rackham and MLB - . "Live Lobster," a new film by Ann Arbor filmmaker Pag Dice will be shown and discussed as part of the Ann Arbor Public Library's "Booked for Lunch" program, 12:10 p.m. at the Library, 343 S. Fifth . . WUOM (91.7 FM) will broadcast a program of music by flutist Jean-Pierre Rampal at 8.05 p.m. Rent-A-Wreck They're number three, and you have to admit they're trying hard. Spencer Segal- ad Jerry Olson of Minuccapilis have gone into business retitnt jinker cars to customers who don't mind taking their chances on a wheezing heap fOr $10 a day or $50 a week. "We even have air conditioning in some of our cars," Segal brags. "It doesn't work, but it's air conditioning." 'The Rent-A-Wreck fleet consists of about 35 junkers, mostly purchAsed for less than $100, which are rented without mileage charges and whatever happens to be in the fuel tank. Rent- - A-Wreck will replace any car that passes away within the limits of the Twin Cities. Segal and Olson say they plan to open a branch at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, where they go into the big time against Hertz and Avis. At the rate some of the clunkers move, however, it might be faster for O.J. Simpson to carry the customer piggyback. On the outside It could be worse-this could be New England (see P. 6). But it'll still be unseasonably cool today, with a high of 60 and a low tonight in the mid 40's. Tomorrow look for sunny skies and slightly warmer temperatures, with a high of 70.